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India's Economic Recovery In Sight : Moody's

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...very-in-sight-Moodys/articleshow/24301684.cms


COIMBATORE: The current economic slowdown would bottom out and a recovery is in sight, according to Moody's Analytics, a division of Moody's Corporation. The agency has, however, cautioned that the days of high growth are gone and the country would have to settle for a more modest growth rate.

"A combination of good luck and modestly better policies will drive steady acceleration in economic activity, although the upturn will be patchy and difficult to see for six months or so. The days of 8% GDP growth are gone," said Glenn Levine, senior economist, Moody's Analytics.

"We expect the Indian economy to hit its potential growth rate of 6.5% by the second half of 2015," he said. "India's economy has been slowing for the past three years but is nearing the bottom of the current cycle," Moody's said. "Weak investment and consumer demand have slowed India's growth over the past three years," it said. GDP (gross domestic product) growth by production slowed to 4.4% year-on-year (y-o-y) in the second quarter and looks to be maintaining this pace through the rest of 2013, the agency said.


Investment should improve from the fourth quarter as the government has been actively trying to restart stalled investment projects, both from the public and private sectors. But the recovery will be modest, as weak business sentiment will take time to turn around, Moody's said. Fixed investment, which was flat in 2013, would grow 3.5% in 2014, it said.

"The consumer slowdown is well-entrenched with discretionary spending especially weak. We expect this weakness to persist through 2014 before a return to trend growth in 2015," Levine said. The fall in consumer and business demand along with weaker exports has led officials to highlight the cyclical nature of the slowdown. "There is some truth to this, but it obscures the likelihood that at least part of the slowdown is structural in nature," Moody's said.

Weaker investment reduces productive capacity and not all of this will be regained in the eventual upswing, it said. "At the very least, the past three years have led investors and businesses to reassess the entire India story. Expectations of 8% or better GDP growth have been supplanted by a more realistic assessment of 6% or 7%," the agency noted. "This shift in expectations and its self-fulfilling consequences suggest a structural component to the slowdown," it said.
 
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India's economic recovery in sight: Moody’s - The Times of India


COIMBATORE: The current economic slowdown would bottom out and a recovery is in sight, according to Moody's Analytics, a division of Moody's Corporation. The agency has, however, cautioned that the days of high growth are gone and the country would have to settle for a more modest growth rate.

"A combination of good luck and modestly better policies will drive steady acceleration in economic activity, although the upturn will be patchy and difficult to see for six months or so. The days of 8% GDP growth are gone," said Glenn Levine, senior economist, Moody's Analytics.

"We expect the Indian economy to hit its potential growth rate of 6.5% by the second half of 2015," he said. "India's economy has been slowing for the past three years but is nearing the bottom of the current cycle," Moody's said. "Weak investment and consumer demand have slowed India's growth over the past three years," it said. GDP (gross domestic product) growth by production slowed to 4.4% year-on-year (y-o-y) in the second quarter and looks to be maintaining this pace through the rest of 2013, the agency said.


Investment should improve from the fourth quarter as the government has been actively trying to restart stalled investment projects, both from the public and private sectors. But the recovery will be modest, as weak business sentiment will take time to turn around, Moody's said. Fixed investment, which was flat in 2013, would grow 3.5% in 2014, it said.

"The consumer slowdown is well-entrenched with discretionary spending especially weak. We expect this weakness to persist through 2014 before a return to trend growth in 2015," Levine said. The fall in consumer and business demand along with weaker exports has led officials to highlight the cyclical nature of the slowdown. "There is some truth to this, but it obscures the likelihood that at least part of the slowdown is structural in nature," Moody's said.

Weaker investment reduces productive capacity and not all of this will be regained in the eventual upswing, it said. "At the very least, the past three years have led investors and businesses to reassess the entire India story. Expectations of 8% or better GDP growth have been supplanted by a more realistic assessment of 6% or 7%," the agency noted. "This shift in expectations and its self-fulfilling consequences suggest a structural component to the slowdown," it said.

wow what a coincidence same thread started by @HIMALYA @exactly same time
http://www.defence.pk/forums/central-south-asia/283785-indias-economic-recovery-sight-moody-s.html
 
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Our population is growing very fast. We need more that 8% growth to keep the unemployment rate low. Instead of food bill and other crap GOI should have introduced a jobs bill. That would have added value to our economy and fed millions of people for something in return not for phokat! Creating more jobs is the only way out for India to achieve high growth in future.:hitwall:
 
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Our population is growing very fast. We need more that 8% growth to keep the unemployment rate low. Instead of food bill and other crap GOI should have introduced a jobs bill. That would have added value to our economy and fed millions of people for something in return not for phokat! Creating more jobs is the only way out for India to achieve high growth in future.:hitwall:

They already passed a job bill some time back. It was called the MNREGA. Passing a bill doesn't mean it magically happens. All social issues cannot be solved by govt passing bills. If that was true, we could simply have passed a bill banning poverty or a bill to make India a developed nation.
 
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COIMBATORE: The current economic slowdown would bottom out and a recovery is in sight, according to Moody's Analytics, a division of Moody's Corporation. The agency has, however, cautioned that the days of high growth are gone and the country would have to settle for a more modest growth rate.

Is that supposed to be good news?

That sounds like the worst news possible.

Considering India's low economic base size (compared to population), double-digit growth is pretty much necessary if India wants to become a developed country this century.

China grew at double-digits for over three whole decades, and yet we are still a developing country!
 
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Is that supposed to be good news?

That sounds like the worst news possible.

Considering India's low economic base size (compared to population), double-digit growth is pretty much necessary if India wants to become a developed country this century.

China grew at double-digits for over three whole decades, and yet we are still a developing country!
CD India does not get the same leadership and decision making as China. India cannot repeat China. India's growth is more driven by Industry and people.
 
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Is that supposed to be good news?

That sounds like the worst news possible.

Considering India's low economic base size (compared to population), double-digit growth is pretty much necessary if India wants to become a developed country this century.

China grew at double-digits for over three whole decades, and yet we are still a developing country!

And you Ch think that China's growth story can be replicated in a parliamentary democracy of 1.2 billion people as diverse as India?? You are far too sensible to be making such comparisons.



India has its own growth story to be told and we'll see what the next few decades bring.........
 
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They already passed a job bill some time back. It was called the MNREGA. Passing a bill doesn't mean it magically happens. All social issues cannot be solved by govt passing bills. If that was true, we could simply have passed a bill banning poverty or a bill to make India a developed nation.

Dude i know about that bill. Under than bill rural folk were supposed to get 100 days of guaranteed employment. Now how do we employ these people? By creating new infra projects! thats the only way to produce mass employment. Take highways as an example. Before UPA1 we were building 20+ km of highway everyday. Now it is down to shits. This government wants to keep India poor. Its part of their fcukin agenda. They can only fool people with schemes.
 
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The gap is widening on daily basis: we achieved a 7.8% growth for Q3 2013.

india needs an uprising to change it fate.

And you Ch think that China's growth story can be replicated in a parliamentary democracy of 1.2 billion people as diverse as India?? You are far too sensible to be making such comparisons.

India has its own growth story to be told and we'll see what the next few decades bring.........

there shouldn't be a nation called india in the first place.

also how is life in your dirty backward loser nation called UK?
 
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Is that supposed to be good news?

That sounds like the worst news possible.

Considering India's low economic base size (compared to population), double-digit growth is pretty much necessary if India wants to become a developed country this century.

China grew at double-digits for over three whole decades, and yet we are still a developing country!

To Indians here who live off inheritance, jobs are not important. They just want to be able to brag.

The gap is widening on daily basis: we achieved a 7.8% growth for Q3 2013.

india needs an uprising to change it fate.



there shouldn't be a nation called india in the first place.

also how is life in your dirty backward loser nation called UK?

The problem with India is that its a british created nation. Not a real nation. As a result, it has all the problems like an African nation, which also has its boundaries drawn by European powers instead of natural tribal boundaries.
 
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Is that supposed to be good news?

That sounds like the worst news possible.

Considering India's low economic base size (compared to population), double-digit growth is pretty much necessary if India wants to become a developed country this century.

China grew at double-digits for over three whole decades, and yet we are still a developing country!

China reported double-digit for over three decades. There is a big difference between reporting growth and actual growth.

If you ponder you will know why there is so much gap in case of china when you move from "headline news" to "ground reality".

China produces 50% of the world coal.. but with population less than 20% of the world.

China produced more steel in the last two decades than USA produced since 1776.

Since nobody is willing to buy all that coal "raw", it has to be burnt entirely in east china (east of the great wall), and chinese enjoy the fumes.

Take out the mineral output of china, and GDP ratio between India and china won't even be 2.5 -- apart from mineral digging part, bulk of the economic activity is a parity.

If you break a bridge on a river every year, and built it a fresh .. or you just buid a bridge that lasts 50 years .. you derive the same utility. But GDP looks great if you follow the former approach ... while the second approach will give you a zero GDP for the next 49 years.

And coal won't last for ever ... neither will CPC's fancy "news" ... because when coal ends, the food supply also ends. No more food imports.
 
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Moody's must be the lamest agency in the world. It states "findings" after they are apparent to all and sundry.

To Indians here who live off inheritance, jobs are not important. They just want to be able to brag.



The problem with India is that its a british created nation. Not a real nation. As a result, it has all the problems like an African nation, which also has its boundaries drawn by European powers instead of natural tribal boundaries.

LOL - because tribal boundaries are set in stone.
 
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Is that supposed to be good news?

That sounds like the worst news possible.

Considering India's low economic base size (compared to population), double-digit growth is pretty much necessary if India wants to become a developed country this century.

China grew at double-digits for over three whole decades, and yet we are still a developing country!

India can't match China's growth rate. China is an outlier. Forget India - no state can match China's economic growth rate unless it adopts China's hybrid model of Communist Government and Capitalist Economy. Cuba is the only country on the horizon which can get those numbers eventually. But it is too tiny to really matter. China deserves kudos for its achievements - it has lifted a lot of people out of poverty. It is not possible for India to adopt such a model although many middle class Indians would like it. For our poor, the only right they well and truly enjoy is the right to vote. They are not going to give it up for an upper strata of society.
 
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:lol:

So as usual the CCP trolls drag in China into a India discussion that has nothing to do with China or Chinese economy and turn this thread into a chibot troll fest as usual.
 
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India can't match China's growth rate. China is an outlier. Forget India - no state can match China's economic growth rate unless it adopts China's hybrid model of Communist Government and Capitalist Economy. Cuba is the only country on the horizon which can get those numbers eventually. But it is too tiny to really matter. China deserves kudos for its achievements - it has lifted a lot of people out of poverty. It is not possible for India to adopt such a model although many middle class Indians would like it. For our poor, the only right they well and truly enjoy is the right to vote. They are not going to give it up for an upper strata of society.

And yet, for a population of 1+ billion people, even a sustained double-digit growth rate for three continuous decades was not enough.

Not even close.

The only consolation is that we are doing quite well in terms of social indicators, such as life expectancy, maternal mortality ratio, etc.
 
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